flim wrote: juamei wrote: I have a book written in I think the 50s (at home, I'm at work) which describes walking the ridgeway. Apparently the largest material difficulty is water. As in you have to come off the ridgeway, in some cases several miles off the ridgeway, to find an available source of water.
Plenty of livestock troughs along the way.
http://backpackinglight.co.uk/product353.asp
It's hard to imagine that our great ancestors would not have provided water along the way in some form if the Ridgeway was always intended to be a long distance route just for traders and the movement of armies as has been suggested. Unless of course it was originally intended to just link up local communities and not as a major neolithic highway but just grew in size. In that case water would not have been a prerequisite as the then farming community (supposedly) would have no reason to travel huge distances.
I have two books on the Ridgeway Path, The Oldest Road and Elizabeth Cull's Walks Along The Ridgway and also R.Hippisley-Cox's 1914 book The Green Roads of England that gives it great mention and is a joy to read.
Reply | with quote | Posted by Sanctuary 28th January 2012ce 11:44 |
The Ridgeway Pilgrimage (Sacred Way) *UPDATE* (Andrew Joseph, Jan 25, 2012, 11:19)- Re: The Ridgeway Pilgrimage (Sacred Way) (tjj, Jan 25, 2012, 15:11)
- Re: The Ridgeway Pilgrimage (Sacred Way) (VBB, Jan 25, 2012, 16:11)
- Re: The Ridgeway Pilgrimage (Sacred Way) (juamei, Jan 25, 2012, 16:34)
- Re: The Ridgeway Pilgrimage (Sacred Way) (tjj, Jan 25, 2012, 23:38)
- Re: The Ridgeway Pilgrimage (Sacred Way) (moss, Jan 27, 2012, 09:45)
- Re: The Ridgeway Pilgrimage (Sacred Way) (Robot Emperor, Feb 12, 2012, 00:41)
- Re: The Ridgeway Pilgrimage (Sacred Way) (VBB, Feb 12, 2012, 11:02)
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